If the person wants benefits not cons utionally required for them to receive, then they must give up bodily fluids.
It's their choice. They are not shackled down and it's not taken without their permission.
You're seriously not making any sense. Money spent by the government to provide free health care to impoverished areas could have been used for drugs?
What does the bill of rights have to do with the fact that 30 legislatures debated and decided that drug testing wasn't an intrusion on the rights of minorities?
I don't know what you mean by "your privacy" in this context - but my point is that this isn't an invasion of privacy.
Huh? That's great and all, but irrelevant to my point - your expectation of privacy is not greater than the state's interest in effectively administering a discretionary program whose funding has a good chance of being used for illicit substances rather than its intended purpose.
If the person wants benefits not cons utionally required for them to receive, then they must give up bodily fluids.
It's their choice. They are not shackled down and it's not taken without their permission.
That's not how it works. You want to be a janitor for a services company that cleans government buildings, that company is required by the federal government to have a drug testing program.
If you don't get caught/prosecuted, then you don't get caught/prosecuted. It doesn't 'justify' anything. But at that point the problem is with law enforcement, not the source of funds.
I don't think they have the 'right' to do illegal things. But if they do, I don't think the source of the funding is the problem.
I need examples of government telling you what you can or cannot spend your money in once it provided it on your welfare card. Stop beating around the bush and provide examples, or simply admit that the government can't (or is unwilling) to do that.
Do crack dealers accept welfare ATM cards? That would be news to me.
My understanding is that it applies to Casinos in Cali too, but I would have to find an article that goes on more details. Obviously, gamblers work around it by heading to Nevada, where Cali laws don't apply. I'm certainly in favor of a federal statute that would outlaw that federally.
I don't think there's a viable solution to that problem right now.
Because the illegal use of drugs is a law enforcement problem.
Requiring to pass a drug test does that. It labels everyone as a druggie unless proven otherwise. The effect of not taking the test is effectively the same as failing the test if taken.
I don't think it's more effective. I think it's the proper way to do it instead of presuming that every poor person is a druggie and having them prove otherwise.
Congress certainly passed law en ling certain persons under a set of cir stances to receive welfare. So welfare is a right granted by Congress to a certain pool of people. The question is wether requiring an invasive test to those people that already fall within the set cir stances is an affront to "being secure in their persons", and thus a violation of the 4th amendment.
I'm in the opinion that it is.
I can't personally answer that with complete certainty. I'm sure the SCOTUS eventually will.
Okay. But that's the company requiring it, not the government directly.
And I think there's probably a reason for that.
No, I'm making total sense. Money that the person could've used to pay for care is instead used for drugs. Now the government has to provide welfare to that person for care. Indirectly, the government is subsidizing the druggie.
Legislatures are not the judicial. It wouldn't be the first time that a law or part of it is stricken down as uncons utional. The bill of rights have to do with the 4th amendment, privacy, which is what we're discussing.
I disagree.
Huh? Sure it is. My cons utional rights trump any state law or regulation.
Every private job I've applied for in the last several years that paid a decent wage required drug testing.
The government is requiring the company to drug test, otherwise the company can't bid on a government contract. It's no different than the welfare recipient who wants a government welfare check. You want to participate, you have to follow these drug testing requirements.
OP: Not in my opinion. The way I see it, one willingly gives up personal privacy in order to accept government help.
I don't agree it's the same. If anything, the requirement is on the qualifications of the bidding process. Also, the enforcer of the testing is the company, not the government.
I tend to agree with this, but that does not change the fact that a 2% failure rate makes this a failed policy initiative. Saving $40,800-$98,400 for a program that will cost $178 million? As Manny pointed out, that 'savings' does not include the cost of enforcing the program or the overall costs to society for dealing with the user's who fail who are no longer eligible.
No different than the government determining qualifications for who can and can't get a welfare check.
The government is the enforcer of making sure the company is following their policy. If they don't, the government enforces their right to terminate the contract.Also, the enforcer of the testing is the company, not the government.
Yet nobody even addressed the point I made of the unknown numbers who do not apply, saving tax payer dollars, because they know they will fail.
I think there is a difference.
If someone gets paid to provide a service on tax payer dime, I have no problem holding them to a high standard. That may include driving records, criminal records among any other number of things.
My question here is if they are going to start with testing welfare recipients for drugs, then why stop there?
Force them to blow into a home breathalyzer every night to show that they aren't spending the welfare money on booze.
Most definitely a slippery slope, imo.
If a person fails the test, the state will not reimburse them for the cost of the test.
Minimal savings, if any.
Maybe if you scored the program like the CBO does, you can find a $500,000,000 savings!
Still don't agree. I think a similar condition to this case would be that the government requires companies not to criticize the government in order to bid.
I'm not sure that's true at all. The requirement is part to qualify for the bidding process (or hiring process). I believe the government requires that a testing process is in place, it doesn't have a direct say on what happens when such testing fails.
Well do you have any facts on the state seeing a decrease in the number of welfare applicants after the policy was ins uted?
so you'd be ok with drug tests for anyone getting something like a federal pell grant?
lol nice glossing-over. If you don't get caught, then the government has subsidized someone's purchase and use of drugs. The problem is both on law enforcement (for not catching the criminal) and the source of funds (for subsidizing the behavior).
You don't think that welfare funds help subsidize drug use and thus contribute to the problem. Got it.
Read your own link about California's EBT cards. I can't believe you needed an example of the government prohibiting the use of welfare funds on certain activities.
Of course they don't. That's why I was scoffing your point earlier when you said "What the government can do is prohibit certain vendors from accepting payment in that form." Vendor restrictions do nothing when it comes to illegal drugs
I updated my post.
Sure there is - drug testing.
And a welfare problem. Especially when welfare funds are being used to purchase drugs.
No it doesn't. So requiring anyone in private employment to take a drug test labels them a druggie?
My point has always been poverty predisposes someone to greater drug use. Anything beyond that is your bias and your words, not mine.
No one presumed that welfare recipients are druggies. If anything, your presuming that everyone who takes a drug test is a druggie.
So shrimp subsidies are a "right" because congress passed a law giving funds to shrimp farmers? A right is a protection extended by the cons ution. An en lement or privilege is a benefit extended by government where it is otherwise not cons utionally required to do so.
Welfare is an en lement that can be taken away by government without being struck down as uncons utional. Else, please point me to where in the cons ution or which Supreme Court case held that there is a right to welfare?
Welfare isn't a right - but an en lement - one's expectation of privacy when participating in the program is not nearly as high as when the government invades their home or searches their person. This expectation isn't as high because the government isn't conditioning one's *right* (welfare) on the sacrifice of another right (privacy). When the government chooses to fund something, it is allowed to condition those funds on satisfying certain requirements.
You still haven't given me a reason why the government can't attach strings to the way it chooses to expend funds other than a vague and general "it violates privacy." That's not true.
lol totally changing what you initially said:
Government subsidized clinics that provide free care to the poor =!= government funds given directly to the poor for medical use. Which one is it?
Every legislature is an interpreter of the cons ution. You don't think they debate and decide upon the cons utional ramifications of certain bills they pass? Especially considering most congressmen are lawyers?
Courts might differ and strike down a law, sure. But the fact that 30 states passed laws conditioning welfare on drug testing suggests to me that there's a strong support for the argument that there's no cons utional violation.
Please explain to me why a welfare recipient has an expectation of privacy in this case again?
Because booze isn't illegal. The slope ends there.
i can tell some of you have never known any drug addicts. drug testing works if it's random (which i don't think it is in this case), otherwise it's an absolute joke. your average junkie or pothead is going to try and pass the drug test before he even thinks about gives up dope. like i said before, passing a drug test is easy. i know quite a few potheads who passed drug tests when applying for a job.
I agree the reality of the situation is that drug testing welfare recipients would be a huge waste of money.
that's silly.
the government will never directly subsidize illegal drug purchases.
why is the government choosing to invade privacy in this one particular instance?You still haven't given me a reason why the government can't attach strings to the way it chooses to expend funds other than a vague and general "it violates privacy." That's not true.
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